Book Contributions

‘Polemical History and The Wars of the Roses’, in The Cambridge Companion to Medieval Historical Writing: Britain and Ireland, 500-1500, ed. by Emily Steiner, Jennifer Jahner, and Elizabeth Tyler (Cambridge University Press, 2019).

‘Dynasty and Division: The Depiction of King and Kingdom in John Hardyng’s Chronicle’, in The Medieval Chronicle III: Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on the Medieval Chronicle Doorn/Utrecht 12 – 17 July 2002, ed. by Erik Kooper (Rodopi: Amsterdam, 2004), pp. 149-70.

Journal Articles

‘A Tretis Compiled Out of Diverse Cronicles (1440): A Study and Edition of the Short English Prose Chronicle Extant in London British Library, Additional 34,764’, The Medieval Chronicle XII (2019), 238-77.

‘Chronicling the Fortunes of Kings: John Hardyng’s use of Walton’s Boethius, Chaucer’s Troilus and Criseyde, and Lydgate’s “King Henry VI’s Triumphal Entry into London”’, The Medieval Chronicle VII (2011), 167-203.

‘“Loke well about, ye that lovers be” (IMEV 1944) and a Sixteenth-Century Reader’s Response to John Hardyng’s Account of Joan of Kent’, Poetica, 69 (2008), 17-25.

‘Political Consciousness and the Literary Mind in Late Medieval England: Men “Brought up of Nought” in Vale, Hardyng, Mankind, and Malory,’ Studies in Philology, 105 (2008), 1-29.

‘“A Good Exampell to Avoide Diane”: Reader Responses to John Hardyng’s Chronicle in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries’, Poetica, 63 (2005), 19-35.